Just the Facts: Inventors That Changed America (2 Pack)

Science marches forward, led by great inventors who changed America and the world. This program focuses on inventors who revolutionized transportation and those whose medical discoveries made the world healthier and safer.Just the Facts: Inventors that Changed America: On the Go & Medical Milestones:On the Go: Learn about British train engineer Richard Trevithick gave the world its first steam railway locomotive in 1804. Then discover, Wilbur and Orville
Wright, who owned a bicycle shop, made history on December 17, 1903, with their first flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, and changed history because they
preferred wings to wheels. Medical Milestones: Herbert Boyer and
Stanley Cohen unlocked the hidden secrets of DNA with genetic engineering,
opening the way for the development of new drugs and increased food production,
as well as cloning. Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin,
revolutionized medical treatment, and won the Nobel Prize in 1945. Charles Drew
pioneered blood banks by developing a new way to house plasma.Just the Facts: Inventors that Changed America: Strong Connection and Brave New World:Science marches forward, led by great
inventors who changed America and the world. This program focuses on inventors
who revolutionized communications and those whose brilliance gave us lasers,
plastic, computers, and transistors. Strong Connections: Thomas Edison still holds the record for patents – he held 1,093 patents and
claimed countless inventions, including many that changed our lives: the
incandescent light bulb, the phonograph, and the first movie camera. Alexander
Graham Bell developed the first version of the telephone in 1876, and his
invention still has people all over the world talking more than a century
later. Guglielmo Marconi invented the radio, which entered America’s living
rooms as the primary source of entertainment early in the 20th century. Brave
New World: Physicist Gordon Gould discovered lasers, which are used for su ...
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Science marches forward, led by great inventors who changed America and the world. This program focuses on inventors who revolutionized transportation and those whose medical discoveries made the world healthier and safer.

Just the Facts: Inventors that Changed America: On the Go & Medical Milestones:

On the Go: Learn about British train engineer Richard Trevithick gave the world its first steam railway locomotive in 1804. Then discover, Wilbur and Orville
Wright, who owned a bicycle shop, made history on December 17, 1903, with their first flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, and changed history because they
preferred wings to wheels.

Medical Milestones: Herbert Boyer and
Stanley Cohen unlocked the hidden secrets of DNA with genetic engineering,
opening the way for the development of new drugs and increased food production,
as well as cloning. Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin,
revolutionized medical treatment, and won the Nobel Prize in 1945. Charles Drew
pioneered blood banks by developing a new way to house plasma.

Just the Facts: Inventors that Changed America: Strong Connection and Brave New World:

Science marches forward, led by great
inventors who changed America and the world. This program focuses on inventors
who revolutionized communications and those whose brilliance gave us lasers,
plastic, computers, and transistors.

Strong Connections:Thomas Edison still holds the record for patents – he held 1,093 patents and
claimed countless inventions, including many that changed our lives: the
incandescent light bulb, the phonograph, and the first movie camera. Alexander
Graham Bell developed the first version of the telephone in 1876, and his
invention still has people all over the world talking more than a century
later. Guglielmo Marconi invented the radio, which entered America’s living
rooms as the primary source of entertainment early in the 20th century.

Brave
New World: Physicist Gordon Gould discovered lasers, which are used for such diverse
purposes as buying groceries, correcting vision, and sending packages. Chemist
Leo Baekeland discovered one of the most important products of the 20th century
– plastic. Alan Turing invented computers, originally to crack German code
during World War II. Now we use computers in nearly every facet of our lives.